The Sacketts - Tyrel Sackett vs. Reed Carney

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • A fine showdown-scene.
    Not necessarily what one expects...but all other possible events would have been dull...
    And this solution is typical again for a story of Louis L'Amour!

Комментарии • 406

  • @bearwilliams1303
    @bearwilliams1303 3 года назад +79

    Those of you who have read the Sackett series remember The Sackett Brand. Tell's wife was murdered and he was ambushed . Later on all kind of Sacketts came out of the woodwork to help him. Might be my favorite, besides Sackett and The Daybreakers.

    • @sox5131
      @sox5131 3 года назад +9

      Galloway was very good to. Another reunion of sorts.

    • @jlmfoy365
      @jlmfoy365 3 года назад +3

      And they all had such fabulous names. Regards Jim UK.

    • @majordamage6949
      @majordamage6949 Год назад +8

      The Sackett Brand is my favorite of the Sackett stories. The best part of the book was when Nolan went into the bar.

    • @esteban1487
      @esteban1487 Год назад +5

      The Daybreakers was awesome

    • @shirishpandey3503
      @shirishpandey3503 Год назад +4

      I love them all

  • @DavidMoore-bl7gb
    @DavidMoore-bl7gb 3 года назад +49

    My 91 year old Grandfather turned me on to these books. Some great adventure stories.

    • @maxzzyzx8038
      @maxzzyzx8038 Год назад +2

      Try some Zane Grey.

    • @monroetruss4737
      @monroetruss4737 Месяц назад +1

      Louis L'amore was an underrated writer and had a huge following. Many old men traded his books. No all, but most are an entertaining read.

    • @DavidMoore-bl7gb
      @DavidMoore-bl7gb Месяц назад

      He also turned me on to Wodehouse.

    • @titus2120
      @titus2120 Месяц назад

      Yes…. A lot of great readings. OST people have no idea…

  • @tyrelsjensen
    @tyrelsjensen 4 года назад +70

    My brother was reading "The Sacketts" when I was born. This is who I was named after. :)

    • @reedsponsler2563
      @reedsponsler2563 4 года назад +3

      Thats pretty cool.

    • @jameshorton7496
      @jameshorton7496 3 года назад +3

      Pretty cool, Tyrel.

    • @rayraden2527
      @rayraden2527 3 года назад +3

      Tyrel i’m a big Sacketts fan my son who’s 32 now middle name is Tyrel He wasn’t fond of the name and I explained that he was just like him I was standing up for the week it was very just about his dealings with people

    • @peteboll5034
      @peteboll5034 3 года назад +2

      Dude, how cool is that!

    • @mairimcintyre6565
      @mairimcintyre6565 2 года назад +2

      You were named well.The Sacketts were great books .better than the rubbish that is churned out these days

  • @whimsicallywiddershins6381
    @whimsicallywiddershins6381 2 года назад +42

    I grew up with my dad reading me the Sackett books every night before bed. The Daybreakers, which this movie is based on, was always my favorite. These books might have been a bit too mature for a six-year-old to grow up hearing...but I don't regret it. I grew up watching Clint Eastwood too. I remember in first and second grade, the teacher told us to bring our favorite books to school and I would bring in Sackett books and talk about gunfights and cattle rustlers and tinker knives. I can only imagine what they thought lol. Logan Sackett and Emily Talon were also a favorite, along with Echo.

    • @bob_frazier
      @bob_frazier 2 года назад +3

      A dad reading you Sackett, I'm envious. What nice memories.

    • @shadowbanned5164
      @shadowbanned5164 Год назад

      The Sackett series is brilliant but personally I prefer the Chantry series with number 7 in the series Fair blows the wind being my favorite.

    • @mcpheonixx
      @mcpheonixx Год назад

      I always enjoyed reading about Barnabas escaping to the new world and his son's that was my favorite book.

    • @gregthoms5232
      @gregthoms5232 Год назад

      ​@@shadowbanned5164 one of my favorites too.

    • @patrickmccrann991
      @patrickmccrann991 Год назад

      Movie was based on two books, "Sackett" and "The Daybreakers".

  • @Buddygold9509
    @Buddygold9509 Год назад +6

    I once worked with a man who grew up down the road from Louis L’Amour. Said he was a great storyteller at a very young age. Kept everyone entertained.

  • @andydavidson4108
    @andydavidson4108 5 лет назад +94

    Ben Johnson, Glen Ford, Tom Selleck, and Sam Elliott. Now there is a cast.

  • @jimwatts4901
    @jimwatts4901 Год назад +13

    I grew up on westerns , still watch em all over , usually on weekends. Sad when u get old and family's dying out , but I still got these westerns and family in my heart and in my head ,always. 👍

  • @stuarttaylor3763
    @stuarttaylor3763 3 года назад +19

    Last of The Breed .
    One of his best.
    Totally under the radar.

  • @bmiller6319
    @bmiller6319 2 года назад +12

    I watched all the westerns with my husband, and the Sacketts were the best. Their stars were all great.

  • @lawrenceeytcheson1317
    @lawrenceeytcheson1317 6 лет назад +36

    The Sackett's was one of the best series ever written or produced for t.v. Long live Louis Lamour.

    • @adamclark9253
      @adamclark9253 5 лет назад +1

      Lamour is dead tho

    • @acquasanta6676
      @acquasanta6676 2 года назад +1

      As long as one person remembers his legacy is safe .
      I keep giving his books to new readers .He lives forever .

    • @IntheBlood67
      @IntheBlood67 2 года назад

      @@acquasanta6676 AMEN, BROTHER!

    • @patrickmccrann991
      @patrickmccrann991 Год назад

      Sadly, Louis L'Amour died in 1988. He still had a dozen additional Sackett series books planned, but they were never finished upon his death.

  • @johnmagill3072
    @johnmagill3072 3 года назад +45

    Top notch cast. Buck Taylor, Ricardo Montelbaun, Glen Ford, Ben Johnson, Tom Selleck & Sam Elliott.

    • @Glock2201
      @Glock2201 3 года назад +3

      It is but I think Jeff Osterhage might have had the best performance in this movie.

    • @Travlr013
      @Travlr013 3 года назад +7

      Along with Gilbert Roland, John Vernon, Jack Elam, L.Q. Jones, Mercedes McCambridge, Slim Pickens, Pat Buttram....overall , quite a cast: Academy Award winners and some of the best supporting cast you could ever ask for.
      BTW, the tales say that Glen Ford, along with Sammy Davis , Jr., were the real fastest guns in Hollywood.

    • @tinsoldier5621
      @tinsoldier5621 3 года назад +3

      Sam Elliot ruined the role of Tell. Made him look like a raving psycho instead of the big normally easy going character. Tom Selleck should have played the part.

    • @patrickmccrann991
      @patrickmccrann991 Год назад +4

      Gilbert Roland not Ricardo Montalban. They looked very similar though, easy to mistake.

  • @jefftappan381
    @jefftappan381 5 лет назад +27

    One of the best Westerns ever made, hands down no BS.

  • @joelsimms4636
    @joelsimms4636 5 лет назад +36

    These were one of the best western series ever.

  • @joelsimms4636
    @joelsimms4636 5 лет назад +24

    Glen Ford! He was one of my favorite heros back in the 50s and 60s The Sackett movies were great westerns.

  • @lt.e.a.sewell6555
    @lt.e.a.sewell6555 3 года назад +46

    I like this scene. It hopefully sends the message that fire power is not as important as brain power. "Hell of a thing killing a man. Take away all he has and everything he's ever gonna have." - Unforgiven (Clint Eastwood)

  • @phillipbuechner6853
    @phillipbuechner6853 7 лет назад +115

    How I love the Sacketts. Read all of L'amour's books. Watched this show back in 1980 and many times since. The casting was incredible. Classic western stars like Glenn Ford, Ben Johnson, Buck Taylor, Jack Elam, Gene Evans and more. And the two men who became America's greatest western stars thru the 90's, Tom Selleck and Sam Elliott. It was a can't miss product.

    • @Knards
      @Knards 6 лет назад +7

      His books were the best. Devoured them like candy

    • @benjaminsibanda8689
      @benjaminsibanda8689 6 лет назад

      How can I get some of his books? I really loved this man

    • @drewby613
      @drewby613 6 лет назад +2

      My favorite of that collection of movies was Crossfire Trail. Mark Harmon was an excellent villain in that one. I have to say I preferred the movies tweaking of the ending as well. Probably sacrilege to say, but there you go.

    • @drewby613
      @drewby613 6 лет назад

      Benjamin Sibanda Barnes & Noble usually has ten or twelve at any one time. If you want older versions and don’t mind used, abebooks.com is a great resource.

    • @tomduffy3965
      @tomduffy3965 6 лет назад +4

      ' The trouble with having a reputation as a tough man is that, sooner or later, there comes a time when you have to BE a tough man.' - Tell Sackett -

  • @jameshorton7496
    @jameshorton7496 3 года назад +28

    Jeff Osterhage as Tyrel Sackett, The Mora Gunfighter. Buck Taylor as Reed Carney. Great performances by both. In the Louis LaMour Sackett books, Tyrel marries the Mexican lady, Drusilla. They move to Mora, NM and he becomes the lawman there and is known as The Mora Gunfighter. Sure wish more of the Sackett stories had been put to film.

    • @frankbyrd6726
      @frankbyrd6726 Год назад +1

      Dub Taylors kid fit the role perfectly

    • @bernicehenson5210
      @bernicehenson5210 Год назад +1

      Same here.

    • @alanhillman7247
      @alanhillman7247 Год назад +1

      My favorite Sackett book was "The Sackett Brand." But probably best it was never produced as a movie. The mental picture of Tell and how he was would likely not have been portrayed quite right, at least to me. I liked Sam Elliot as Tell, but he would not have been my first choice of actor to play Tell.

  • @davidhall1468
    @davidhall1468 11 месяцев назад +5

    I ha e read all his books numerous times. Still a great read after all these years.

  • @flirtyguy34
    @flirtyguy34 3 года назад +19

    when Tyrell Sackett is quiet and calm as can be, is when you should be most afraid of him. because that is when he is absolutely deadly. damn near unstoppable. because he doesn't like killing. but when forced to it he will win no matter what.

  • @wesleybaldwin7199
    @wesleybaldwin7199 3 года назад +9

    My son is named Logan , after Logan Sackett , the outlaw. I was a big fan of Louis L' Amour when growing up.

    • @donniemarler3909
      @donniemarler3909 3 года назад +1

      My late father put Louis L'Amour books in his lunch bucket for shifts in the mine at his lunch. I learned to read from them. Logan Sackett was a favorite character of mine as well.

    • @craigmorrison478
      @craigmorrison478 Год назад

      My son is named Cullen

    • @justme-xq5ml
      @justme-xq5ml Год назад

      That's funny, my son is Logan as well. For the same reason.

  • @davidanderson2973
    @davidanderson2973 2 года назад +3

    I'm a 75 yo, Born/Raised Former North Dakotan, Avid Louis L'Amour Reader / Collector - Named our Second Son Tyrel. He turned 40 in Dec 2021.

    • @andaolsen1539
      @andaolsen1539 2 месяца назад

      I wanted to name my second son Tyrel!! he just turned 48. He ended up being Kyle after my brother. LOL

    • @davidanderson2973
      @davidanderson2973 2 месяца назад

      @andaolsen1539 Tyrel was Hell on Wheels with a Six Shooter !!! Our Tyrel Takes his SIx Shooter along When Camping in Bighorns and Casper Mts, as He had 3 Beagles camping too. They all have their Own Camp Chairs an Blankets !!!

  • @chiefymike
    @chiefymike 9 лет назад +69

    Buck Taylor who plays Carney has a long history in westerns. He was in Tombstone, Cowboys and Aliens, the Alamo, Gettysburg (not a western), Wild Wild West, Roughriders and scores of others. Good actor.

    • @johnt7232
      @johnt7232 8 лет назад +14

      +chiefymike
      Gunsmoke

    • @brianboisguilbert6985
      @brianboisguilbert6985 8 лет назад +2

      +chiefymike God and Generals.

    • @pittland44
      @pittland44 8 лет назад +1

      Very cool, I did not know that.

    • @brianboisguilbert6985
      @brianboisguilbert6985 8 лет назад +9

      He is also the son of character actor Dub Taylor who appeared in such films as YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU, MR SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON, BONNIE AND CLYDE, THE WILD BUNCH, A MAN CALLED HORSE, THE UNDEFEATED, CONAGHER and numerous TV shows.

    • @chiefymike
      @chiefymike 8 лет назад +2

      +18tangles Oh, I wasn't comparing Taylor to Johnson. Everyone has their favorites I guess.

  • @jamesdunn4575
    @jamesdunn4575 2 года назад +9

    Love Tom Selleck movies,always great acting,Jesse Stone,Sacketts, Magnum P I,Roy,all great!

    • @futuresonex
      @futuresonex Год назад +1

      If the western movie's popularity had held on a few decades longer Tom Selleck could have been the next John Wayne.

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 5 месяцев назад

      It takes a real Selleck fan to understand the mention of Roy.

  • @jamesmoser9039
    @jamesmoser9039 Год назад +5

    When your older brothers are Tom Selleck and Sam Elliott, it's hard to stand out. But Tyrel was an absolute badass in this scene.

    • @jefftappan7973
      @jefftappan7973 Год назад +1

      And Tyrel was the quiet one. No one back in the high-up hills tangled with him.

    • @jefftappan7973
      @jefftappan7973 Год назад

      You could see the " oh crap" look on Carney's face. Or, as Bill Cosby once said " First you say it, then you do it" .

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 Год назад +2

      Tyrel was considered the mean one by his brothers.

  • @Tool-Meister
    @Tool-Meister 3 месяца назад

    Warms the heart! My original AF is a 293 Pacific. It ran a nightly 3-hour Christmas tree duty this past (2023) Christmas season, easily pulling twice the cars it originally came with in 1954. They don’t make toys like that any more! So great to see you dedicated to the hobby!

  • @Beemer917
    @Beemer917 3 года назад +9

    The Sacketts were good books but my favorite was last of the breed. If you’ve never read it you have a treat coming and there’s ary a horse or cowboy in the book!

    • @Glock2201
      @Glock2201 3 года назад

      Agreed that is one of his best if not best books. It really shows just how good a writer he was even when he was not doing westerns.

    • @Bakgrind
      @Bakgrind 3 года назад +1

      My personal favorite was Jubal Sackett, but The Last of the Breed is a really good choice.

    • @cardo718
      @cardo718 3 года назад

      I have the full collection of leather bound books by Louis L'Amour. I inherited from my grandfather. He passed away in 1990.

    • @lukebear3710
      @lukebear3710 3 года назад

      One of his best for sure

    • @kellymartin7474
      @kellymartin7474 2 года назад

      Hoka hey!!

  • @jamesireland6606
    @jamesireland6606 3 года назад +7

    This is awesome I just finished reading the daybreakers

  • @james8156
    @james8156 5 лет назад +9

    Great western and reminds me of my youth watching it as I would vacation in AZ.

  • @SpiritSeeker66
    @SpiritSeeker66 4 года назад +7

    The older Mexican gentleman on the porch “Gilbert Roland” great in the 1955 western the treasure of poncho villa with Rory Calhoun

  • @sheldonbass4238
    @sheldonbass4238 5 лет назад +27

    Always loved this scene. As usual, the book was better than the movie, and the movie is great! I've read every book Louis L'amour wrote, I think. Sackett series was really good. Even the female Sacketts are tough. I loved the Echo character-she was definitely a woman to "Ride the River" with...but that's earlier in the saga.

    • @captinbeyond
      @captinbeyond 4 года назад

      I was wondering if this scene stayed with the book...when Hollywood has a tendency to give us gore( gunfight with close up). It must have been hard on directors to just go with a gun fight ending with disarming vs actual guns blazing. And I wonder as a viewer, are we really disappointed in the ending, because the build up was there and you wanted to see him kill smart mouth.

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 2 года назад

      @@captinbeyond What Tyrol did to him was worse than killing. He marked him as a blowhard and coward -- fair game for anyone with a mean streak.

  • @davidsmith871
    @davidsmith871 2 месяца назад

    I remember reading many of LL's books when I was in the Navy. I could go through one between watches. Great stories.

  • @jefftappan381
    @jefftappan381 7 лет назад +14

    One of the best Westerns. Ever. Carney had his Brown Pants moment. Or, as Bill Cosby said, " First, you say it. Then, you do it " .

    • @dirtyharry72
      @dirtyharry72 5 лет назад

      Not interested in what a rapist thinks! Billy the pill boy is pulling time for rape. Sad you have to sedate a chick to get laid!

    • @55Quirll
      @55Quirll 4 года назад +1

      Still like the movies and comedy acts Cosby did. I wonder why the women waited so long to come forward, I would say it was because of the money.

    • @bethfoley84
      @bethfoley84 Год назад

      @@55Quirll if you’re afraid of not being believed and then being blackballed, perhaps you wait until your career ends and society seems more inclined to listen. Just a thought.

  • @ivansimms2802
    @ivansimms2802 2 года назад +1

    "Now git...."
    Coolest line in the whole damned movie🤣!

  • @sammylacks4937
    @sammylacks4937 3 года назад +2

    Had a friend that I.had not seen in a long time help n me move after Hurricane Matthew flooded my home. Was a real mess in my area and I had taken most of my belongings that were wet from roof leaks or flood water from 16 " of rain that backed up in my home for second time. H. Floyd did same but left roof intact. I noticed someone pick up a new copy of Sackett by L. Lamour , looked at it , then dropped it in trash. I thought how sad it was this person would throw out a book , but, to think of a Louis Lamour as trash. I still shake my head thinking how glad I was to see and retrieve it. Back on shelf with others in its family. Love all his westerns but the Sackett series I keep reading and will as long as I am able. Books are my treasure anyone who trashes them , I ll take.

  • @vaughngordon1095
    @vaughngordon1095 Год назад +3

    What's funny about this is that street scene looked far too familiar to me. It was as if I remember being at that exact location long ago.... then I remembered where that was. In the spring of 1983 my family and I were on a vacation and traveled through South Dakota. On the way through we stopped at a tourist attraction that featured a realistic wild west town complete with stagecoach rides, reenacted gunfights and even a magic show. It was memorable.
    That place was Buckskin Joe's.... and the scene in the clip beginning was at the time I was there an old fashioned candy store.....
    My memory is something else because I wanted to see if I actually was right and.... after a bit of an internet search, I discovered Buckskin Joe's was basically the repurposed set from The Sackets....

  • @mlbowen6476
    @mlbowen6476 Год назад +2

    Glenn Ford played a masterful role in this movie. The desire to be more and be accepted for higher and better things, but upon losing the election his antisocial personality couldn't be contained. His anger and bitterness could only end one way. They showed that very well.

  • @user-wv7he6dv4b
    @user-wv7he6dv4b 25 дней назад

    Great job on the video! It was both entertaining and educational.

  • @hitty9
    @hitty9 6 лет назад +7

    Ultimately it's humanity that interests us the most

  • @randyransio7870
    @randyransio7870 3 года назад +4

    Some of the best western actors ever.

  • @sonnyspliff
    @sonnyspliff 6 лет назад +6

    My God, this scene is amazing!

  • @clementblache2449
    @clementblache2449 7 лет назад +64

    For me Kilkenny was the baddest and the fastest on the draw followed by the tall stranger and William Tell Sackett.
    Louis L'Amour was my favourite Western writer, read every book .....

    • @BoomLover1000
      @BoomLover1000 5 лет назад +6

      You and me both...I met Louis L'Amore three times, great man, great writer..

    • @troypimenta3883
      @troypimenta3883 5 лет назад +5

      Lance Kilkenny - The Man.

    • @Andy.Garcia
      @Andy.Garcia 5 лет назад +5

      Nah, Bowdrie’s got ‘em all beat!

    • @steiny3353
      @steiny3353 5 лет назад +1

      Clement Blache
      Me too......

    • @majordamage6949
      @majordamage6949 5 лет назад +2

      Don't forget about Utah Blaine. Fists or guns, he was every bit as good as Kilkenny.

  • @richardjohnson4238
    @richardjohnson4238 Год назад +1

    I believe this to be the greatest "gunfight" scene ever filmed. You can cut the tension with a knife.

  • @topgallant32
    @topgallant32 Год назад +4

    Sure miss Louie Lamour. Best western writer ever.

  • @edalhouse645
    @edalhouse645 2 года назад +1

    What a line up in this scene! Cheers!

  • @tinafoster8665
    @tinafoster8665 4 года назад +4

    I love that : *"Now git."*

  • @strattuner
    @strattuner 5 лет назад +17

    THERE ARE THOSE that talk,and then there are those who do not balk

  • @leonardcooper2680
    @leonardcooper2680 4 месяца назад

    I have 90+ Louis L'Amour books in my library 😎 The Sackett books are a good read..

  • @charlieswearingen500
    @charlieswearingen500 3 года назад +3

    Had I been in Reed's place I think I would have offered Sackett my hand to let him know it was over... forever.

  • @jefftappan2803
    @jefftappan2803 3 года назад +3

    Does anyone else hear " Big Iron " right about now?

  • @jimbishop8667
    @jimbishop8667 7 лет назад +58

    Man!!! I just watched the Sackets part 1 yesterday, now today they are all deleted. I hope whoever is responsible for this cowardly and heinous act is staked out in the desert by Comanche and has to watch their guts get eaten by buzzards. People the movie is 38 years old, don't you think it's time to let it go, call it a magnanimous gift to the people.

    • @larrysheets2508
      @larrysheets2508 5 лет назад +6

      Good show, or not, if it is still under copyright or patent, using it without permission is theft. There is no second option, no justification, or common good answer that allows for the taking of property without due process. Anymore than it would be right to go into your house and take from you.
      If it was taken down, theft is the most common reason.
      I loved the books, and liked the movie quite a bit, but not enough to steal the man's legacy.
      Every kid was taught that he can't always have what he wants, just because he wants it. It has to be bought, made, earned, or gifted to him before it's his to do with as he wills. Anything less, is theft.

    • @captinbeyond
      @captinbeyond 4 года назад

      @@larrysheets2508 Yet,here you are on a "stolen/copyright/patent" video making comments. You just as guilty as the rest of us thieves

    • @larrysheets2508
      @larrysheets2508 4 года назад

      prices false assumption. If I witness a crime, I did not perpetuate that crime.
      That would be as logical as being charged with hit and run, as you sat in traffic watching it happen, or being charged with armed robbery for being a customer in a bank as it got robbed. Presence does not equal guilt.

    • @captinbeyond
      @captinbeyond 4 года назад +1

      @@larrysheets2508 Sorry , too late, you broke the law by watching this clip without paying. If you promise to forget what you saw,I'll forget you were here.

    • @larrysheets2508
      @larrysheets2508 4 года назад

      @@captinbeyond did you have to share an IQ growing up? Seems you are making do with just a small portion of one now.
      This is a very simple concept. A witness is not guilt of the crime. The perpetrator is. Class dismissed.

  • @wmosco
    @wmosco 10 лет назад +46

    anyone else recognize reed carney as Buck Taylor who played the blacksmith turned deputy on Gunsmoke (Newly O'brien)...?

    • @jameskoehn1005
      @jameskoehn1005 6 лет назад +3

      Gunsmith, not blacksmith.

    • @stretch-fd4dg
      @stretch-fd4dg 5 лет назад +4

      Buck Taylor also played Jack Johnson on the 1993 movie Tombstone a real life gunfighter

    • @baskervillebee5748
      @baskervillebee5748 5 лет назад +1

      His dad was Dub Taylor who was in a lot of westerns, too.
      Buck is a VERY good western artist these days.

    • @WalterDWormack214
      @WalterDWormack214 5 лет назад

      The second I saw his face!

    • @mrbakerskatz
      @mrbakerskatz 5 лет назад

      Nope .
      J/k

  • @johnconklin5180
    @johnconklin5180 Год назад

    Fan here too. Read all the Sackett books many times over.

  • @Parents_of_Twins
    @Parents_of_Twins 2 года назад +2

    Drinking to get ready to go to a gunfight makes about as much sense and drinking to get ready for a car race. Either way you end up in a casket, so pay your tab.

  • @rowdyyates8626
    @rowdyyates8626 Год назад +1

    I think this was Gilbert Roland’s last movie.He was a great supporting actor of the 1940’s,50’s and early ‘60’s.

  • @JDA97367
    @JDA97367 5 лет назад +2

    I read somewhere that Buck Taylor was originally scheduled to play the Tyrel Sackett role but the director changed his mind when he saw Osterhage's screen test.

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 Год назад +1

      Buck was too old. IIRC, Tyrel was 17 when this fight took place.

  • @larrygrant-hy8sk
    @larrygrant-hy8sk 2 месяца назад

    If you want the full "sackett" experience , read the Louis L'Amour books. They are timeless great literature.

  • @yarply12
    @yarply12 5 лет назад +10

    I would like to have seen some movies about Logan Sackett, or of Barnabas

    • @clintezell3298
      @clintezell3298 5 лет назад

      Yarply Twelve who now will test our braves. To the far blue mountain

  • @paulkatz258
    @paulkatz258 3 года назад

    Thanks for uploading this.

  • @garykiser6848
    @garykiser6848 4 года назад

    The Sacketts are always a favorite Western konnagar was a good Western Sam who he played Sam Houston that was a good one the Shadow Riders are always good some of these movie you can watch three or four times a week and never get tired of them

  • @ireneklauber7442
    @ireneklauber7442 3 года назад +2

    Wow! Those cowboys had beautiful teeth.

  • @brianjones7907
    @brianjones7907 6 лет назад +3

    Anybody Else Spot That Carney's holster is Tied down Right Up Till Tyrel Orders Him To UnBuckle It & Suddenly TheTie Thongs Are Hanging Loose....

    • @steiny3353
      @steiny3353 5 лет назад

      Brian Jones
      Ha Ha I thought I was just being picky. but I noticed.

  • @jimnoakes9394
    @jimnoakes9394 2 года назад +1

    My son's middle name is Tyrel. I was a sackett fan also

  • @Daniel-nr6iw
    @Daniel-nr6iw 3 месяца назад

    Reed Carney played by Buck Taylor. Anybody who knows about him knows what a fine gentleman he really is. I liked him in this role because it was completely opposite of his usual roles. He and his father are 2 of my all time favorites.

  • @bernicehenson5210
    @bernicehenson5210 Год назад

    My husband loves the Selleck DVD movies. Wish there were more made from the books.

  • @angie539
    @angie539 8 лет назад +32

    Sacketts rule. But Kilkenny is the king :)

    • @mansuper1965
      @mansuper1965 8 лет назад +8

      love the three Kilkenny book

    • @niagra898
      @niagra898 7 лет назад +4

      Angie Tyrel was regarded as the fastest brother I think-be a hellava match up against Kilkenny.

    • @paladinsix9285
      @paladinsix9285 4 года назад +4

      Riley, of Riley's Luck was as impressive as any of the Sacketts.
      Echo Sackett was perhaps my favorite, from Ride the River.

  • @jmmonroe9670
    @jmmonroe9670 Год назад +1

    God I love that! The look of total defeat on Carneys face when Ty says "now git!" LOL

  • @michaellemick4193
    @michaellemick4193 Месяц назад

    Tell Sackett and Reed Carney were also both in the movie Getttysburg, playing General Buford and Colonel Devin.

  • @jeffcoxen1386
    @jeffcoxen1386 Год назад

    one of my all time favorites!

  • @glennsmith9355
    @glennsmith9355 3 года назад +1

    Blooper-- on the porch the close up of Carney's gun shoes the holster string tied around the leg. When Carney unbuckles the gun belt, the string is already loose.

  • @AgeBetterDotCom
    @AgeBetterDotCom 3 года назад +1

    Jeeeze......he just spit out a perfectly good SEEGAR!

  • @mattyarbrough71
    @mattyarbrough71 2 года назад

    Anyone know the name of this movie plz

  • @jerrybobteasdale
    @jerrybobteasdale 3 года назад +2

    Too many people standing in the line of fire. They wouldn't make that mistake.

  • @nodangclue
    @nodangclue 9 лет назад +16

    a bit different from the embarrassing story of what Tyrel actually did to Reed in the book though
    but then you'd have to read the scene in the book wouldn't you?
    a great moment in L'Amour writing history

    • @nodangclue
      @nodangclue 8 лет назад

      me too!
      Louis L'Amour's version sounded off in a jocular mood indicating his intent was to voice a humorous yet serious tone to the action
      I laughed so hard when I first read it...no doubt about it for sure though the movie actor version was poorly indicative of the way that scenartio played out when compared to the written words

  • @sakarinjunkraw3286
    @sakarinjunkraw3286 5 лет назад

    The struggle to decide whether to stay or to go ..... It is when luck will be on our side.

  • @machintelligence
    @machintelligence 7 лет назад +23

    Just as well that no shots were fired, seeing as how there were spectators directly behind both gunslingers. I doubt that folks were really that dumb back in those days.

    • @troyevans6355
      @troyevans6355 6 лет назад +1

      machintelligence they hit what they drew on.

    • @davidfranks3141
      @davidfranks3141 5 лет назад

      He shamed him, taught a lsoon instead of a killing,In regards t on no shots being firedm killing the wrong fellow or lady was a hanging offense,usually within hours after the crime.

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 2 года назад

      Maybe that's why Tyrol walked past Carney -- turned him around. Tyrel knew where his shots would go.

  • @randyallen4480
    @randyallen4480 Год назад

    It's when men were men and those of us who read these books crave to have those times back agian

  • @rockinredneck57
    @rockinredneck57 3 года назад +1

    Yes, but the beauty of Drusilla. Tyrel was a lucky man.

  • @robvegart
    @robvegart 6 лет назад +7

    Sorry my bad, I had the kid confused with Terrence Hill!

  • @gyleake
    @gyleake 5 лет назад +3

    whiskey and guns.... always a great combination and always turn's out well....

  • @rickstevens1384
    @rickstevens1384 Год назад

    Great line from the book...Tyrel: Till the day & hung'em up I was the fastest gun alive. Or something like that.

  • @milesterwillegar9973
    @milesterwillegar9973 2 года назад

    This is the first western scene that has some authenticity to it that I've seen in a long time. When Carney pulls his leather tie down slide strip on his holster to free his gun. EXCEPT he would have pulled it down automatically out of habit to insure that his gun would not fall out of his holster. And then made sure his gun was loose and ready.

    • @jaycollins9244
      @jaycollins9244 Год назад

      Except it wasn't authentic. There never were hammer thongs on those old vintage holsters. That would have been a sure way to get killed. Those holsters back then buried the gun securely until you needed to pull it. Hammer thongs were all Hollywood coming from drop loop fast draw steel lined rigs. Certainly not authentic. If you saw a thongs on a genuine vintage holster it was added much later.

  • @tinafoster8665
    @tinafoster8665 4 года назад +2

    4:00, Ty Sackett says, " now unless you want to duke it out with me here and now, get the f*** outta here." Then when Carney just kinda deflates lol, Ty says "Now git."

  • @carlover1016
    @carlover1016 4 года назад +3

    First thing my brother said when he saw this movie was “He shoulda pantsed him after he threw his gun in the trough

  • @jefftappan7973
    @jefftappan7973 Год назад

    Another great scene from a great movie.

  • @robvegart
    @robvegart 6 лет назад +1

    The guy who plays Sacketts was in spaghetti westerns early in his career. Seen him before!

  • @asifi
    @asifi 3 месяца назад

    Childhood Memories

    • @asifi
      @asifi 3 месяца назад

      A book name :BOSHOTI" western genre published by Sheba Prokashoni was the same story

  • @jefftappan2803
    @jefftappan2803 3 года назад +1

    As Bill Cosby once so wisely observed " first you say it, then you do it. Also know as a brown pants, moment.

    • @RjBenjamin353
      @RjBenjamin353 3 года назад

      As Bill Cosby once so wisely said “Relax baby, here drink this it’ll make you feel better “

  • @johntarleton6330
    @johntarleton6330 3 года назад

    If you like this and like to read check out the books about the Sacketts. They go back in time way before this.

  • @jameskirchner2655
    @jameskirchner2655 Год назад

    One of my favorite

  • @tammygilliam3324
    @tammygilliam3324 Год назад

    Is this a 4 hour movie?

  • @ivanrupcic4599
    @ivanrupcic4599 4 года назад +1

    That is Matt Dillons' deputy from Gunsmoke,Newly.😁😁👍

  • @montyhileman593
    @montyhileman593 4 года назад +1

    The Cactus Kid can hold his own

  • @sailmaker11
    @sailmaker11 8 лет назад +28

    The actual book was better.

  • @Adui13
    @Adui13 3 года назад

    The most watched scene from this movie

  • @user-gt2lh2ec9e
    @user-gt2lh2ec9e 5 месяцев назад

    Wow, Tyrel can do it! John P.

  • @stevebritton2222
    @stevebritton2222 Год назад

    Best Western series ever writen

  • @docdave15
    @docdave15 8 месяцев назад

    Carney is another prime example of talking the talk but not being able to walk to walk. He reminds me of Ike Clanton in Tombstone. Someone who talks all tough and how he's gunna k!ll him some folks and yet the shoes on the other foot he's scared stiff. Ty, while always standing up for himself, never felt the need to prove himself. He never looked for trouble. Meanwhile, any time Carney was even in the frame he's trying to provoke him or wanting to cause trouble under some misguided sense of revenge, "the most worthless of causes" (King Arthur, Camelot). And what came about from this? Carney got figuratively pantsed in front of everyone and was humbled by this "farmboy".
    Moral of this subplot: pick your battles wisely. (Actually that probably fits the other antagonists of this movie)

  • @mahmodabdulsalam99
    @mahmodabdulsalam99 10 лет назад +2

    Interesting duel.

  • @cheryledunsmuir3688
    @cheryledunsmuir3688 10 месяцев назад

    I would live to see this but i can find it

  • @GonzoLarry
    @GonzoLarry 5 месяцев назад

    "Now git." 'Nuff said!